Christina has a glass of water. Michael has a fruit juice drink. Both drinks are at room temperature, and both students add ice to their drink's. Condensation begins to on the outside of Christina's glass before Michael's. How can they state their observations as a problem to design an experiment.

A) What is condensation?
B) How does ice cause condensation to form in water?
C) Does the temperature of the air influence condensation?
D) Does the type of liquid influence the rate at which condensation forms?
This is for the people who got on now.

Thank you

That helped a lot

I think the answer is d

Yes sir! Nice work.

make a list of things that can cause weathering The Rock

what things can cause what body of water could afford the largest sedimints

You asked this twice ;)

Not even going to guess?

Let me give you some hints:

What variables are the same for each?

B) does not address the variable

They know what condensation is.

I think its B and thanks for helping finish my homework assement

To design an experiment based on their observations, Christina and Michael can explore the following questions:

A) What is condensation? - This question aims to understand the process of condensation. To answer this question, they can conduct research or consult educational resources to learn about the science behind condensation.

B) How does ice cause condensation to form in water? - This question focuses on the specific interaction between ice and water that leads to condensation. To answer this question, they can design an experiment by placing ice in different temperature water and observing the formation of condensation over time.

C) Does the temperature of the air influence condensation? - This question explores the impact of air temperature on condensation. To answer this question, they can set up a controlled experiment by placing identical glasses of water with ice in different temperature environments and recording the rate of condensation formation.

D) Does the type of liquid influence the rate at which condensation forms? - This question investigates whether different liquids exhibit varied rates of condensation when ice is added. To answer this question, they can set up multiple glasses and add ice to different liquids (e.g., water, juice, milk) while keeping all other variables constant. They can then observe and compare the rate of condensation formation in each glass.

By designing experiments based on these questions, Christina and Michael can gather data and draw conclusions about the factors that affect condensation, both in terms of external conditions and the type of liquid used.